The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Roberts leads Panthers to win over Louisiana-Monroe

- By Stan Awtrey For the AJC

Justin Roberts scored a career-high 23 points Saturday, but it may have been his defense that made the biggest difference in Georgia State’s 84-62 win over Louisiana-Monroe.

Roberts was the man in Georgia State’s fierce manto-man defense who was responsibl­e for the Warhawks’ Michael Ertel, his team’s leading scorer. Roberts stuck annoying close to Ertel for three-quarters of the game, denying him the ball and preventing any easy shots. The frustrated Ertel — who scored 39 a few days earlier against South Alabama — had to expend maximum effort to scratch out his 10 points.

Roberts, a 5-foot-11 sopho- more transfer from DePaul, shot the lights out, too. He made 8 of 10 from the floor, seven of them 3-pointers, and added three rebounds

and two assists. His previous career scoring best was 22 against the College of Charleston and Middle Georgia, both this season.

“He didn’t really have a role as a freshman when he was at DePaul, and he sat out last year and gets thrust into a role he’s never had at this level,” Georgia State coach Rob Lanier said. “Now you’re starting to see his true talent emerge. But he’s also our best on-ball defender.”

The victory was the 14th consecutiv­e for the Panthers at the GSU Sports Arena and marked back-to-back blowouts. Georgia State spanked Louisiana-Lafayette by 38 on Thursday.

Georgia State (12-6, 5-2 Sun Belt) got 18 points and five rebounds from Corey Allen and 11 points each from Damon Wilson and Nelson Phillips. The Panthers shot 57.7% as a team and had 18 assists on 30 made field goals. Louisiana-Monroe (6-10, 2-5) was led by Tyree White with 16 points and seven rebounds and J.D. Williams with 14 points.

“We’re not a great defen- sive team yet, but when your team gets to the point where they’re really bought into wanting to be good on defense, there’s a certain level of selflessne­ss that’s associated with that,” Lanier said. “You’re saying, ‘I’m putting the team first.’ And once you enter into that space, that selflessne­ss winds up carrying over into your offense.”

Georgia State used an 8-0 run for a quick 8-3 lead. But the visitors got off the deck and tied the score at 14-14 with 11:44 left in the half.

The Panthers then scored seven straight and outscored Louisiana-Monroe 20-9 to take an 11-point lead with 4:52 left.

The Panthers started hot in the second half and made four consecutiv­e field goals to complete a 13-2 run and take a 50-36 lead for their biggest lead of the game with 16:01 remaining. Georgia State plays its next three on the road at South Alabama, Troy and Georgia Southern.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Corey Allen and Justin Roberts (right), whose 23 points were a career-high for the sophomore, celebrate after Saturday’s win at home.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Corey Allen and Justin Roberts (right), whose 23 points were a career-high for the sophomore, celebrate after Saturday’s win at home.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States